US7860179B2 - Combined frequency-time domain power adaptation for CDMA communication systems - Google Patents
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- This invention relates to a method and apparatus for wireless communications and, more particularly, to adaptive power control for CDMA communication systems.
- CDMA Code division multiple access
- FDMA frequency division multiple access
- TDMA time division multiple access
- Power control is an important part of these systems. Such power control can have a substantial impact on the capacity and apparent quality of service of the CDMA system.
- the need for power control in these systems arises at least from the need to mitigate intercell interference that arises from frequency reuse.
- a further need for power control arises for minimizing intracell interference.
- transmission power is adapted so as to maintain the same received desired power level from all mobiles.
- CSI channel state information
- MC-CDMA modulation a combination of frequency domain spreading and multicarrier modulation, is employed to achieve frequency diversity and multiple access operation.
- MC-CDMA systems generally are divided into two types: the first type encodes the original data sequence for a user via a spreading sequence and then a different carrier with each chip, and the second type spreads serial-to-parallel converted data sequences using a given spreading code and then modulates a different carrier with each of the data sequences.
- Se for example, S. Hara et al. “ Overview of multicarrier CDMA,” IEEE Communications Magazine , pp. 126-133 (December 1997).
- a conventional MC-CDMA transmitter allocates the available transmission power uniformly over all subcarriers.
- MC-CDMA multicarrier code-division multiple-access
- transmission power is adapted so that the desired signal strength at the receiver output is maintained at a fixed level.
- the transmission power is first allocated over the N′(1 ⁇ N′ ⁇ N) strongest subcarriers rather than over all possible N subcarriers and then it is adapted so that the desired signal strength at the receiver output is maintained at a fixed level.
- the frequency domain and the time domain power adaptation techniques outperform the prior art non-adaptive techniques in which constant uniform power is allocated over all the N subcarriers.
- the combined frequency and time domain power adaptation technique provides a significant performance gain over the frequency or time domain power adaptation techniques alone.
- FIG. 1 shows a simplified block diagram of a CDMA wireless communication system incorporating power adaptation in accordance with the principles of the present invention
- FIG. 2 shows an exemplary power spectrum of a transmitted signal using the multi-carrier communication technique
- FIG. 3 shows a simplified block diagram of a portion of the modulator in the transmitter from the system in FIG. 1 ;
- FIG. 4 shows a simplified block diagram of a portion of the demodulator in the receiver from the system in FIG. 1 ;
- FIG. 5 shows a plot of the average bit error rate (BER) versus N′ for frequency domain power adaptation in the system of FIG. 1 in accordance with the principles of the present invention
- FIG. 6 shows a plot of the optimal number of N′ versus the number of users K for frequency domain power adaptation in the system of FIG. 1 in accordance with the principles of the present invention
- FIG. 7 shows a plot of the average BER versus E b /N 0 for all types of power adaptation applied in the system of FIG. 1 in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- FIG. 8 shows a plot of the average BER versus the number of users K for all types of power adaptation applied in the system of FIG. 1 in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- transmission power adaptations are presented along the frequency domain, the time domain, and a combination of both the frequency and time domains in an exemplary system utilizing quasi-synchronous uplink MC-CDMA communications with an MRC receiver.
- This exemplary system is presented as a framework within which to understand the principles of the present invention, as opposed to limiting the applicability of this invention.
- the transmission power is allocated uniformly over N′(1 ⁇ N′ ⁇ N) strongest subcarriers, which exhibit the N′ largest channel gains, among the N available users on the system.
- N′ subcarriers exhibit channel gains that are relatively high, the desired signal strength at the receiver increases for a given total transmission power.
- a small number of selected power adapted subcarriers N′ also leads to a reduction of effective spreading gain which, in turn, helps to mitigate multiple-access interference.
- the effect of selection of the number of power adapted subcarriers N′ on the performance of the frequency domain power adaptation technique is described in detail below.
- One important effect is that there exists an optimal number of subcarriers N′ that contributes to a minimization of the average BER.
- the transmission power of each user is dynamically adapted so that the desired signal strength at MRC receiver output is maintained at a fixed level.
- the transmission power is first allocated over the N′(1 ⁇ N′ ⁇ N) strongest subcarriers, rather than over all possible N subcarriers, and then the transmit power is adapted so that the desired signal strength at the receiver output is maintained at a fixed level.
- the combined frequency-time domain power adaptation has a significant performance gain over the power adaptation in only frequency domain or in the time and that all these transmit power adaptation techniques provide significant performance gains over a system in which power adaptation is not employed.
- FIG. 1 An exemplary MC-CDMA communication system is shown in FIG. 1 , where K simultaneously active mobile stations 110 (i.e., mobile stations 110 - 1 through 110 -K) communicate with a base station 120 .
- K simultaneously active mobile stations 110 i.e., mobile stations 110 - 1 through 110 -K
- FIGS. 2-4 Relevant details of the transmit power spectrum, the transmitter architecture, and the receiver architecture employed in the system of FIG. 1 are depicted in FIGS. 2-4 .
- the system in FIG. 1 shows only one cell in a multi-cell system for ease of understanding, although the results derived herein are applicable to multi-cell systems.
- the implications of a multiple-cell system can be analyzed and accounted for by simply accounting for an out-of-cell interference components.
- channel variations due to fading are assumed to be slow relative to the data bit duration, and are also assumed to be independent for different users.
- each mobile user employs N c subcarriers and binary phase-shift-keying (BPSK) modulation.
- BPSK binary phase-shift-keying
- SIP serial-to-parallel
- the mapped signals are adjusted by amplifier 303 using the ⁇ coefficients and then combined together by summing junction 304 for output to and transmission by antenna 113 .
- the power spectrum of an exemplary transmitted signal is shown in FIG. 2 .
- Such an arrangement of subcarriers enables each of the N MC-CDMA subcarriers channel to be assumed independent.
- the exemplary spectrum shown in FIG. 2 also shows the repetition of the same data bit on each of the N subcarriers from one of the F parallel data streams of the S/P converted data sequence, It should be noted that F also determines the frequency separation between neighboring subcarriers modulated by the m th data bit.
- the transmitted signal corresponding to the m th data bit d k,m of the user k can be expressed as follows:
- p k,N-1 represent the random spreading sequence for mobile user k
- S T is the average transmission power
- ⁇ k,n is the transmitter power gain for the n th subcarrier of mobile user k.
- ⁇ k is the delay of user k, which is assumed to be independent and uniformly distributed over a bit interval
- ⁇ k,n is the channel induced phase of user k at the n th subcarrier, which is assumed to be independent and uniformly distributed over [0,2
- the users' signals are received by the antenna.
- Receiver 124 is depicted in more detail in FIG. 4 for extracting the communications from user 1 (the subscript is one less than the user identifier k).
- the received signal r(t) is propagated down each of N substantially similar paths. For simplicity, the operation along path n is described herein.
- Mixer 401 extracts the signal on the n th subcarrier. This signal is then despread by correlator 402 using spreading code p 0,n . Gain of the despread signal is then adjusted by amplifier 403 . Summing junction 404 combines the subcarrier constituent signals for the corresponding data bit together. After integration over a bit period by element 405 , the recovered data bit ⁇ circumflex over (d) ⁇ 0 is output by switching element 406 .
- Equation (5) The first term in Equation (5) is the desired signal term.
- the second term labeled I MAI is the multiple-access interference term induced by the other K ⁇ 1 active users, and the third term ⁇ is the white Gaussian noise.
- I MAI and ⁇ are independent random variables with mean zero and variances
- CSI channel state information
- transmission power is not adaptively allocated. Instead it is allocated uniformly over total N subcarriers. This is commonly understood to be the case in prior art systems. Performance of such a non-adaptive transmission technique is presented below for the purpose of subsequent performance comparison with power adaptation techniques described below in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- Equation (10) By substituting Equation (9) and Equation (10) in Equation (8), one obtains the SINR, ⁇ no , for the prior art non-adaptive transmission technique as follows:
- P _ b ⁇ 0 ⁇ ⁇ Q ⁇ ( v no ⁇ g ) ⁇ P G 0 ⁇ ( g ) ⁇ d g ( 13 )
- P b is the probability of a bit error and parameters Q(x) and G k are defined as follows:
- Equation (16) g N - 1 ⁇ e - g ( N - 1 ) ! , g ⁇ 0. ( 16 )
- Power adaptation in accordance with the principles of the present invention can be understood in the context of FIG. 1 .
- the received signal r(t) is supplied to channel estimation element 121 to obtain an estimate of the signal strength and, thereby, the channel power gains G k .
- the estimated channel gains are then ordered in ordering element 122 . Ordering is performed for the estimated channel gains in decreasing order. With the channel gains ordered, it is possible in element 123 to calculate the amplifier power gains ⁇ and ⁇ for the transmitters and receivers in the system. Once calculated by the time domain and frequency domain power adaptation techniques described below in more detail, the amplifier power gains ⁇ and ⁇ are supplied to the system transmitters and receivers.
- a feedback channel is shown for supplying the transmitter amplifier power gains ⁇ from the calculation element 123 to the K user mobile station transmitters.
- the feedback channel can be realized as a real or logical or virtual wireless channel received by each of the mobile station antennas.
- the transmitter amplifier power gains ⁇ are received by the related mobile station on its respective antenna and are then processed and applied to the user's associated transmit power amplifiers 303 in transmitter 112 , wherein the transmit power of each subcarrier is adjusted to the level related to the transmitter amplifier power gain a for that user.
- the feedback channel can be a real channel such as a separate dedicated signaling or control channel allocated within the communication protocol.
- the feedback channel can be realized as a logical or virtual channel by using, for example, an overhead portion or a payload portion of X symbols in a data transmission sequence from the base station for transmitting the adapted transmit power gain levels. This information could be recovered by the transmitter and applied to the corresponding transmit power amplifier.
- the feedback signal would include the sequence of adapted transmit power amplifier gain levels together with an indicator or index associating each level with its particular mobile user station.
- the transmission power is allocated in accordance with the principles of the present invention uniformly over only the N′(1 ⁇ N′ ⁇ N) subcarriers that have highest channel gains rather than by distributing it over all possible N subcarriers as done in the non-adaptive transmission prior art technique described above.
- the transmitter power amplifier gains with such a frequency domain power adaptation technique are calculated in element 123 as follows:
- ⁇ k , n f ⁇ 1 / N ′ , ⁇ if ⁇ ⁇ G k , n > G k , N ′ ′ 0 , ⁇ otherwise ( 19 )
- the receiver power amplifier gains calculated using the frequency domain power adaptation are given as:
- Equation (20) It should be understood that the receiver combining formation in Equation (20) corresponds to the signal being transmitted over only N′ strongest subcarriers.
- ⁇ f v f ⁇ Z 0 ( 22 )
- the transmission power is adapted in the time domain only.
- the transmission power is distributed over all N subcarriers and, in contrast to the prior art non-adaptive techniques, the transmission power is dynamically adapted for each symbol in the time domain so that the desired signal strength at a maximal ratio combining receiver maintains fixed desired level.
- the expected value of the transmitter amplifier gain levels E[ ⁇ k t ] should be substantially 1.
- Equation (8) Substituting Equations (29), (32), and (33) into Equation (8) yields the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR), ⁇ t , for the time domain power adaptation technique as,
- ⁇ t [ K - 1 2 ⁇ ⁇ N + N 2 ⁇ ( N - 1 ) ⁇ N 0 E b ] - 1 . ( 34 ) It should be noted that the SINR ⁇ t does not fluctuate with the channel fading, since the transmitter adapts its power levels to maintain a constant SINR at the receiver.
- the combined frequency-time domain power adaptation is a two-step process in which frequency domain power adaptation is performed prior to the time domain power adaptation.
- the transmission power is allocated over only the subset of N′ strongest subcarriers, where 1 ⁇ N′ ⁇ N.
- Power adaptation is the performed in the time domain to maintain the desired user signal strength at a desired fixed level.
- E[ ⁇ k ft ] is preferably equal to unity.
- FIG. 5 shows a plot of the average bit error rate (BER) versus N′ for frequency domain power adaptation in the system of FIG. 1 in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- the number of subcarriers N was selected to be 8 and the bit energy to noise spectral density ratio, E b /N 0 , was chosen to be 10 dB.
- the number of users, K is varied from 2 in curve 502 to 5 in curve 501 .
- the average BER in Equation (26) is depicted as a function of N′, from which it can be observed that there exists a value of N′ that minimizes the average BER.
- This set of graphs indicates that, for given system parameters, the average BER with the frequency domain power adaptation can be minimized by appropriately choosing the number of N′.
- FIG. 6 shows a plot of the optimal number of N′ versus the number of users K for frequency domain power adaptation in the system of FIG. 1 in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- the number of subcarriers N is again selected to be 8.
- the optimal N′ is plotted as a function of the number of active users K for several values of E b /N 0 .
- Curve 604 utilizes E b /N 0 of 5 dB; curve 603 utilizes E b /N 0 of 10 dB; curve 602 utilizes E b /N 0 of 15 dB; and curve 601 utilizes E b /N 0 of 20 dB.
- N′ increases with an increasing number of users K. This is because a higher spreading gain is required to mitigate the multiple access interference for larger numbers of users, K (i.e., interference limited region),
- K i.e., interference limited region
- a smaller number of optimal subcarriers N′ yields better performance for a smaller number of users K (i.e., noise-limited region) because, in order to mitigate the channel fading impairment, diversity gain obtained by reducing N′ is needed more than spreading gain.
- FIG. 7 shows a plot of the average BER versus E b /N 0 for all types of power adaptation applied in the system of FIG. 1 in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- the number of available subcarriers N is selected to be 8 and the number of users K is selected to be 4.
- the average BERs for several adaptation techniques are compared in FIG. 7 , wherein the optimal N′ that minimizes the average BER was used for both the frequency domain and the frequency-time domain power adaptations. It shows that the combined frequency-time domain power adaptation (curve 704 ) has a significant performance gain over the non-adaptive technique (curve 701 ).
- FIG. 7 indicates that for MC-CDMA communications, joint adaptation of the transmission power in the frequency-time domain makes more efficient use of the available transmission power than power adaptation in the frequency domain or the time domain alone.
- FIG. 8 shows a plot of the average BER versus the number of users K for all types of power adaptation applied in the system of FIG. 1 in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- the number of subcarriers N was selected to be 8 and the signal to noise ratio E b /N 0 was chosen to be 15 dB.
- FIG. 8 shows the average BER versus K with several adaptation techniques. Again the combined frequency-time domain power adaptation in curve 801 yields much better performance than the non-adaptive transmission technique in curve 804 for all numbers of users, K. The performance gain becomes more pronounced as the number of users K decreases.
- the time domain power adaptation technique in curve 802 outperformed the frequency domain power adaptation technique in curve 803 under these conditions. Such performance gain can be translated into a reduction of the total number of subcarriers required to achieve a target BER for a given number of users, which in turn means a reduction of required system bandwidth.
- the power adaptation techniques described above are based on knowledge of the channel state information on each of the subcarriers. In experimental practice, the performance of the power adaptation techniques can be negatively affected if the channel state estimation is not reliable. Therefore, the transmission power adaptations in MC-CDMA communication systems which require the transmitter to have reliable a priori CSI about the subcarriers can be applied to systems with slowly-varying channel characteristics, such as cellular systems for pedestrian or nomadic environments, wireless local area networks (WLAN or WiFi), or wireless local loop (WLL) systems.
- WLAN or WiFi wireless local area networks
- WLL wireless local loop
- the description above has set forth details about a novel technique for adapting transmission power in MC-CDMA communication systems in the frequency domain, in the time domain, and in a combination of the time and frequency domains.
- the transmission power has been allocated to only the N′ strongest subcarriers.
- time domain power adaptation the transmission power is adjusted to maintain the signal strength at a fixed level.
- a combination of the frequency domain power adaptation and the time domain power adaptation outperforms the non-adaptive technique for 9 noise-limited and interference-limited regions, respectively.
- the combined adaptation of the transmission power in the combined frequency-time domain was shown to significantly outperform the power adaptation in only frequency or time domain as well as over the non-adaptive technique.
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Abstract
Description
where pk,0, pk,1, . . . , pk,N-1 represent the random spreading sequence for mobile user k, and dk,m is the mth binary data bit which is serial-to-parallel converted with bit duration of T=FTs. ST is the average transmission power, and αk,n is the transmitter power gain for the nth subcarrier of mobile user k. In order to meet the fixed average transmission power constraint,
should be 1 for all kε{0, 1, . . . , K−1}. It is assumed that sufficient channel state information (CSI) is available at both transmitter and receiver. Techniques for acquiring and estimating CSI are well known in the art.
where τk is the delay of user k, which is assumed to be independent and uniformly distributed over a bit interval; μk,n is the channel induced phase of user k at the nth subcarrier, which is assumed to be independent and uniformly distributed over [0,2π]; n(t) represents the white Gaussian noise with zero mean and two-sided power spectral density N0/2; Gk,n is an exponentially distributed random variable representing the channel power gain for user k at the nth subcarrier, whose probability density function is given by:
It is assumed that Ω0 is normalized to unity. Due to the complex nature of the transmit signal structure, the theoretical analysis herein is focused only on the mth data bit carried by N subcarriers out of m, m+1, . . . , m+F data bits carried by Nc subcarriers.
where the subscript of the data bit is one less than the user identifier k (here k=1), βk,n is the receiver power gain for the nth subcarrier of user k, and bit energy Eb=STT. The first term in Equation (5) is the desired signal term. The second term labeled IMAI is the multiple-access interference term induced by the other K−1 active users, and the third term ρ is the white Gaussian noise. IMAI and ρ are independent random variables with mean zero and variances
respectively. Therefore, the SINR, Γ, for the desired
αk,n no=1/N, n=0, 1, . . . , N−1. (9)
βk,n no =G k,n , n=0, 1, . . . , N−1. (10)
By substituting Equation (9) and Equation (10) in Equation (8), one obtains the SINR, Γno, for the prior art non-adaptive transmission technique as follows:
Using a Gaussian approximation based on the assumption that the interference plus noise in Equation (5) is Gaussian with zero mean and a variance of E[IMAI 2]+E[η2], it is possible to calculate the bit error rate (BER). Accordingly, the average BER for the non-adaptive transmission technique is given by
where Pb is the probability of a bit error and parameters Q(x) and Gk are defined as follows:
respectively. The probability density function of Gk is given by:
Then by substituting Equation (16) in Equation (13) and using the result of known techniques in Proakis, Digital Communications, 3rd Ed., p. 781, Eq. (144-15) (McGraw-Hill 1995), it is shown that the average BER in Equation (13) can be written as:
where G′k,0≧G′≧ . . . ≧G′k,N-1 are the order statistics obtained by arranging the estimated channel gain for the N subcarriers of user k, {Gk,n}n=1 N-1, in decreasing order. Similarly, the receiver power amplifier gains calculated using the frequency domain power adaptation are given as:
It should be understood that the receiver combining formation in Equation (20) corresponds to the signal being transmitted over only N′ strongest subcarriers.
It follows from Equations (8), (19), (20), and (21) that the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR), Γf for the frequency domain power adaptation is given by:
Thus, the average BER with the frequency domain power adaptation is given by,
By substituting Equation (25) into Equation (26) and using a published result, we get the following for average BER for the frequency domain power adaptation:
αk,n t=αk t /N, n=0, 1, . . . , N−1 (28)
and
βk,n t =G k,n , n=n=0, 1, . . . , N−1, (29)
respectively. In order to satisfy the average transmission power constraint that applies to most commercial wireless systems, the expected value of the transmitter amplifier gain levels E[αk t] should be substantially 1.
αk t =G R t /G k (30)
where the channel gain Gk is defined in Equation (15). It then follows from the average power constraint of the system and Equation (16) that GR t is given by:
where, in the last step, integral tables can be used.
Also from Equations (28), (30), and (31), the transmitter amplifier gain levels can be expressed as,
Substituting Equations (29), (32), and (33) into Equation (8) yields the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR), Γt, for the time domain power adaptation technique as,
It should be noted that the SINR Γt does not fluctuate with the channel fading, since the transmitter adapts its power levels to maintain a constant SINR at the receiver. The average BER realized with the time domain power adaptation is given by,
respectively.
In order to maintain the received power of the desired mobile station signal at a desired fixed level, the transmitter power amplifier levels are given as:
αk ft =G R ft /Z k, (38)
where Zk is defined in Equation (24). To meet the average power constraint in these systems, E[αk ft] is preferably equal to unity. Hence,
With Equations (36), (37), and (39), it is possible to show that:
By substituting Equations (36), (37), and (41) into Equation (8), it is possible to show that the SINR, Γft, for the frequency-time domain power adaptation technique as:
Therefore, the average BER is given by:
Claims (28)
αk,n t=αk t /N, n=1, 2, . . . , N,
βk,n t =G k,n, n=1, 2, . . . , N.
αk,n t=αk t /N, n=1, 2, . . . , N,
βk,n t =G k,n , n=1, 2, . . . , N.
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Also Published As
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US20050213552A1 (en) | 2005-09-29 |
US20090147749A1 (en) | 2009-06-11 |
WO2005086829A3 (en) | 2009-06-04 |
WO2005086829A2 (en) | 2005-09-22 |
US7483493B2 (en) | 2009-01-27 |
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